7th July - 9th September 2023

High Season - A collaboration and group exhibition between Jahn und Jahn, Encounter Gallery, Gomide & Co and Klemm's Galleries

Heinz Butz - Antony Cairns - Leelee Chan - Ofra Grinfeder - Julius Heinemann - Sven Johne - Maria Lira Marques - Whitney McVeigh - Diogo Pimentão

Rua De Sao Bernardo, 15, Lisbon

July 1st-July 31st, 2023

Re-Naissance - Group exhibition curated by Hettie Judah at Unit London: "The exhibition explores themes of culture, legacy and power through the work of artists with very different experiences of motherhood.These artists assess the maternal within a lineage stretching across generations." July 1st-July 31st, 2023, Unit Gallery, LondonClick here

 

November 2021

Cantadora and the Path of Hope - Whitney McVeigh writes on the oral traditions  -Click here

October 12th-16th, 2022

Whitney McVeigh's Interval of Shadows will be exhibited at Eykyn Maclean, Frieze Masters, London, October 12th-16th, 2022

August, September, 2019

The Museum of Nature, founded by archaeologist Niede Guidon, covers approximately 130,000 hectares and is administered by the Museum of the American Man Foundation (FUMDHAM), in partnership with the Chico Mendes Institute (ICMBio) and the Institute for Historical Heritage and National Art (IPHAN). Whitney McVeigh will be in residence, August-September, 2019 by invitation of curator Marcello Dantas 

 

The Happenstance of Illumination on Whitney McVeigh’s solo exhibition at Eykyn Maclean, New York, features in new collection of essays 'Wordy' by Simon Schama, published by Simon & Schuster, June, 2019.

21st October-3rd November, 2020

Encounter Contemporary is pleased to present Artist Rooms opening on Wednesday 21st October at Copeland Gallery in South London. The show, which celebrates the third edition of this critically acclaimed annual project, marks Encounter’s first exhibition of each of the participating artists: Harminder Judge, Whitney McVeigh, Alexis Teplin, Alexi Tsioris. Click here

April 18, 2018 - September 3, 2018

The Getty Villa in Los Angeles, will open their first contemporary exhibition in April 2018, Plato in LA: Contemporary Artists’ Visions. Featuring the work of eleven artists, Paul Chan, Rachel Harrison, Huang Yong Ping, Mike Kelley, Jeff Koons, Joseph Kosuth, Paul McCarthy, Raymond Pettibon, Adrian Piper, Whitney McVeigh and Michelangelo Pistoletto. The exhibit is curated by Donatien Grau around the permeation of Plato’s philosophy into contemporary art. 

Click here for Getty Museum

Click here for New York Times

12th May, 2018 - 26th July, 2018

From 12 May 2018 until the end of July, NIROX Foundation in South Africa will host Not a Single Story – The Winter Sculpture Exhibition, co-curated by Elisabeth Millqvist and Mattias Givell, Wanås Konst foundation. The exhibition is an exchange between sculpture parks on two continents looking at individual artistic practices as overlapping dialogues and bringing forward contemporary concerns and working methods related to sculpture. Artists include: Jane Alexander (SA) Lena Cronqvist (SE) Frances Goodman (SA) Bronwyn Katz (SA) Marcia Kure (NG) Gunilla Klingberg & Peter Geschwind (SE) Marianne Lindberg De Geer (SE) Esther Mahlangu (SA) Whitney McVeigh (US) Nandipha Mntambo (SA) Sethembile Msezane (SA) Zanele Muholi (SA) Caroline Mårtensson (SE) Yoko Ono (JP/US) Claudette Schreuders (SA) Mary Sibande (SA) Ayana V Jackson (US) Sophia van Wyk (SA) Nelisiwe Xaba (SA)

18,088 Days is an installation of stones located in the Cradle of Humankind.The work explores the marking of time whilst acknowledging passed history and our connection to the land. By placing the stones on a classical plinth, the artist is making a comment on nature's postition in history. The number 18,088 represents the number of days from birth (November 3rd, 1968) to the present day (May 12th, 2018). The stones are a metaphor for the thousands of stories we carry within that make up individual lives.

 

 

September 9th-12th, 2021

Encounter is pleased to present a booth of internationally acclaimed artists Antony Cairns, Nicolas Feldmeyer and Whitney McVeigh at Photo London 2021. The exhibition will draw out questions of temporality and memory focusing on intimate groups of surreal and uncanny images. Through a range of innovative material processes the artist’s navigate between digital and analogue, representation and illusion to disrupt the boundaries of the photographic medium. Whitney McVeigh brings to Photo London a unique series of altered found photographs. Embodying a sense of time and human imprint these previously unseen portraits occupy an engaging space somewhere between vision and knowledge, accumulation and erasure. Click here.

For 'Sedition Magazine' Article click here

October, 2014-19

As a practicing artist in painting, installation and film, I work under an interdisciplinary area of research entitled Human Fabric. Human Fabric looks at our collective identity, linking our common threads through land, our clothes, our borders, our belongings and our philosophies. The research considers the human as vessel, container and carrier of stories and memories. Through found material and site-specific projects, the work alludes to the layering of time and the unseen echoes of human history.


 

May 15th-May 19th, 2019

Whitney McVeigh's drawings and paintings will be exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery with Encounter Contemporary, May 2019

https://www.drawartfair.com

Encounter Contemporary 

 

 

October, 2014

Selected by the Serpentine Gallery for the Extinction Marathon as part of online collaboration with 15 Folds, curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist.

Light Switch | 2014

Demolition - local studio building

On September 13th, 2014 at 2pm Whitney McVeigh photographed the demolition of a building that had been inhabited by thirty artists for six years. The GIF makes references to physical deconstruction and commercial growth through rapid imagery. It also refers to the memory held by structure and the eventual demise of a creative hub leaving an echo and imaginative resonance, a ‘flashback’ behind. The more you look, the more you see isolated industrial objects. In one of the longer frames a light switch hangs suspended, no longer a functional object, a last statement before it disappears.


*These images form part of a larger archive of images of home and remains

Light Switch | 2012|  still image

November, 2020

Imagined Spaces anthology (edited by Kirsty Gunn ad Gail Low) features Gabriel Josipovici, Duncan Maclean, Whitney McVeigh, Kenny Taylor, Elizabeth Chakrabarty, Philip Lopate, Tomiwa Folorunso, Emma Boland, Meghan Delahunt, Linda E Chown, Paul Noble, Lorens Holm, Graham Johnston and others. The book is supported by The Royal Society of Edinburgh and includes paintings as well as creative writing by the artist. 

 

Kirsty Gunn: How the new Whitney McVeigh exhibition at Mount Stuart shows us the “other” half of human experience -Click here

20th May-7th June, 2021

Forthcoming Group Exhibition What Remains - Featuring works by Gabriele Adomaityte | Adam Ball | Antony Cairns | Lawrence Calver | Gordon Earl Adams | Nicolas Feldmeyer | Charles Hadcock | Nour Jaouda | Gerry Judah | Whitney McVeigh | Neha Vedpathak - Copeland Gallery, Peckham with Encounter at Copeland Gallery, Peckham

August, 2020

 Archaeology of Memory - Interview with Alexander Caspari and Whitney McVeigh - click here

16th March - 21st April, 2019

Mount Stuart Trust is delighted to announce a solo exhibition by Whitney McVeigh this spring as part of its expanded Contemporary Visual Arts Programme featuring new work.

Whitney McVeigh reaches into the Bute Archive, traditionally the realm of a patriarchal narrative, and focuses on intimate traces of the history of women in the house.

In this show she presents curated assemblages of archive material and objects, and (following on from her recent work Divine Rules at the Getty Villa CA) a selection of books from the Mount Stuart library, together with her own open letter and texts addressed to the public reader and inscribed on brass plaques placed throughout the house.

Join Mount Stuart and Whitney McVeigh in conversation with Charlotte Rostek, Head of Collections, and Susanne Calice, Psychoanalyst and Member of the British Psychoanalytical Society, about the archive and exhibition at Mount Stuart on Saturday 16 march at 3.30pm.

Click here

March 20th - April 20th, 2018

Eykyn Maclean is pleased to present Whitney McVeigh: Elegy to Nature, a solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and found objects, which will run March 20 - April 20, 2018 at their New York gallery. The publication will be accompanied by an essay, 'The Happenstance of Illumination' by Simon Schama

April/May 2015

St Peter's Church - Installation View (detail)

25th April to 21st June, 2015

Whitney McVeigh is making a new installation for St.Peter’s Church, next to Kettle’s Yard.  Her compelling work explores the presence of history, collective memory and the nature of mark making as a human imprint. Recent pieces have involved the juxtaposition of found objects from the past century or, in parallel, paintings and drawings concerned with the body and its image. McVeigh is currently Creative Research Fellow at University of the Arts, London. Born in New York in 1968,  she lives and works in London. The artist will be discussing her work for St.Peter’s Church with Director, Andrew Nairne on Saturday 20th June at 2.30pm as part of the Castle Hill Open Day.

Kettle's Yard Installation

Kettle's Yard Interview, May, 2015

11th-21st August, 2016

McVeigh has participated in 'As Before' curated by Tim Etchells at Kunstverein Braunschweig, Germany which includes more than 70 photographs donated by contemporary artists, showing themselves as children

July-September, 2017

Whitney McVeigh is in residence in Beijing in February/March 2017 with the artist Wei Ligang. Her work will be exhibed at Traum, New York 1078 Madison Avenue (82nd Street) NY 10028, New York City with Michael Goedhuis July-September, 2017

August 4th - September 6th, 2016

Primitive Botany, 28 x 38cm, 2016

Please click here for further information

Hazard will be exhibiting Whitney McVeigh's work at Johannesburg Art Fair

 

December 12th - March 9th, 2016

Solo exhibition at Summerhall in Edinburgh until March 10th 2016

"Lost objects find a universal message" - Giles Sutherland, The Times

'Over a twenty-year period McVeigh has amassed a collection of ‘markers of time’ – found objects weighted by their unique patternations; tracing former lives and the once tangible relationship an individual may have had with the object. The artist acts as custodian of these ‘markers’. She isolates yet elevates the materials, entrusting them to reflect and spur philosophical understandings of history, time and memory - forming a shared language.'

June 15th - July, 30th, 2016

Group video show Paradoxal Stranger, Cape Town. for more info click here

 

March 27th, 2015

 

'Birth' Origins at the end of life - HD Video 11 minuties

Birth is a moving image oral history enquiry into how a group of women have embraced the physical and psychological changes that come with carrying and the birth of children. The work invites women at the end of their life to recount their memories to the camera. Do they ever forget birth? How does birth transform the ways in which we relate to life? The project examines birth within the context of ageing and palliative care and challenges society’s often darker associations linked to dying and ageing. The film engages with both the universal and personal; regardless of age or gender, we are all born and the narrative of birth is vital in the wider context of human history.

'Birth' was made in collaboration with St Christopher's, Pulse Films and University of the Arts, London. It has been shown at Kurashiki University of Science and the Arts (Solo exhibiton), Japan, Hazard Gallery, South Africa (Solo Exhibiton Contours) (2016) and Summerhall Edinburgh (Solo Exhibiton Language of Memory) (2015-16).

Click here for press release

In conversation with Amy Bluett at the Royal Academy of Arts, London March 2015


Whitney McVeigh will be exhibiting New Ink Paintings with Michael Goedhuis, London from October 15th - November 20th, 2015. Click here

January 21st - February 6th, 2017

6857 Days (runtime 4hours 58 minutes)
New sound installation Curated by Holly Knox Yeoman 

The Chapel, House of St Barnabas, 1 Greek St, Soho, W1D 4NQ

6857 Days is a new sound installation by Whitney McVeigh in which the artist counts the days of her children's lives from birth to 18. This piece is developed from the original work, presented as part of the artist’s solo-exhibition Language of Memory at Summerhall Arts Centre, Edinburgh (Dec ’15- Mar ’16).

McVeigh counts 1-6857, and 1-6671 and offers the viewer to participate in a dedication to her children’s formative years, and more importantly creates a place of communal solace. McVeigh’s recording of domestic life, in production and nature, mirrors the repetitive nature of the everyday. The work is a haunting and moving account of time that brings the sacred to the ordinary, exploring loss of childhood and the transformations within family relationships. 

 

October 23rd - January 6th, 2016

Open by appointment. Artists include Alastair Mackie, Rory Menage, Francois Morellet, Whitney McVeigh, Anthony Gormley, Graham Sutherland, Alexander Calder, Shaun McDowell, Bouke de Vries, Bill Viola, Yayoi Kusama, Alexander Calder, Gary Hume

February - March, 2016

Artists explore and question cultural boundaries. How individuals connect or reflect to local cultures. Whitney McVeigh has created an archive through the general public inviting them to make a note and record and respond to one of four words. The act of writing and placing of the paper invites a kind of processing and letting go, becoming a form of ritual that can later be read as a collective document and an opportunity for ordinary people to place their thoughts publicly yet anonymously. The paper is from the historical archive of Kathimerini Newspaper and The New Book of Knowledge. The project references passed history and regenerative/future memory.

 

March 8th, 2016

Please click for event 

July, 2015

Transformative Storytelling and the Art of Human Memory, 14th July, 1.30pm - Kurashiki University of Science and the Arts, Okayama, Japan. In conversation with Ayami Nakotani  about the making of film 'Birth': Origins at the end of life

June 23rd - July 18th, 2015

Film 'Birth': Origins at the end of life 

Rocking History | Performance | Whitney McVeigh
14 July 12:30 – 13:00

Rocking History is a performance work that invites men and women of all ages to hold and rock their arms as an act of and invitation for peace and to reflect on what it means to exist in today’s world. Through the body and movement of space in time, the viewer and those taking part, are invited to think about our collective responsibility to bring about change and positive energy to the next generation. 

January 21st, 2015

Design and Visual Art Practice Hub: Archive as Art…Art as Archive I: Whitney McVeigh

Coordinated by Charlotte Hodes and James Putnam

The LCF Forum for Design and Visual Art Practice Hub presents Whitney McVeigh for a presentation and Q & A session. Whitney will introduce her work following her recent appointment as Fellow in Creative Practice at London College of Fashion. As a practicing artist working in painting, installation and film, McVeigh’s current interdisciplinary research entitled Human Fabric looks at both personal and collective history, linking our common threads through land, our clothes, our borders, our everyday belongings and our philosophies. The research considers the human being as vessel, container and carrier of stories and memories. Through found material and site-specific projects, her work alludes to the layering of time and the unseen echoes of human histories.

click here to event 

London College of Fashion 

21st January - 5.30pm-6.30pm

RHS West JPS - (Lecture hall)

20 John Princes Street London

 

10th December 5-7pm | UAL

"Creativity and the power to Act" Ai Wei Wei

The artist will contribute to a conversation at the Centre for Sustainable Fashion about expanding ideas, work and actions relating to cultures of resilience. This project, named the Culture of Resilience Project, is a two year UAL-wide initiative, the goal of which is to build a “multiple vision” on the cultural side of resilience by putting together a set of narratives, values and ideas that are coherent in that they are all based on resilient systems, but in many other aspects they are very diverse. A multiplicity of images that, like the stones of a mosaic, may generate a larger one: a mobile, dynamic, colourful vision of a resilient, sustainable civilization. Whitney McVeigh will give a short talk on her recent film and forth coming installation (spring 2015) at St Peter's Church, Kettle's Yard Museum, Cambridge.

 

 

September, 2014

Click here for Interview

 

1st-23rd August, 2014

TJ Boulting is delighted to present our summer group show, where several leading independent art and photobook publishers have been invited to curate the work of artists and photographers of interest to them. In recent years there has been a prolific amount of activity in the art publishing world, with fairs such as Offprint in Paris, specialist bookshops, organisations such as Printed Matter who established the successful New York Art Book Fair, and particularly a rise in young publishers, innovating on small budgets and producing exciting and original small-run publications, often a far-cry from the traditional models seen before in art publishing.

Pieter Hugo, Boo Saville, Patti Smith, Robin Maddock, Henry Hudson, Whitney McVeigh, Ricardo Cases, Nicol Degiorgis, Lorenzo Vitturi, Bjarne Bare, Tim Smyth, Adeline de Monseignat , Lewis Chaplin, Tamsin Relly, Asger Carlsen, Victoire Thieree, Hugo Wilson, Charlotte Schnabl, Victoria Ahrens, Ivy Armour, Federico Clavarino, Charlotte Dumas, Vladislav Krasnoshek and Sergiy Lebedynskyy, Ayca Kosegullari, Cristina de Middel, David Noonan, Viviane Sassen, POV Female Bogota, POV Female Johannesburg, POV Female Tokyo, POV Female London, Augustin Steyer, Akiko Takizawa, Eloise van der Heyden

November, 2013

Children's Charity, Dramatic Need has galvanised leading artists from the contemporary art world, to create original pieces that will be exhibited and auctioned on 27th November. The works are inspired by the real life experiences of children in Rwanda and South Africa, grappling with the aftermath of war, violence and poverty. The works will be previewed by auction partner, Paddle 8 and include original work from artists including Anthony Gormley, Anish Kapoor, Jake and Dinos Chapman and Turner prize winner Rachel Whiteread. Each artist has been moved and inspired by the personal stories of children to create sculptures, drawings, photographs and paintings. The artworks will be auctioned at Victoria Miro Gallery on 27th November, 2013.

http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2013/nov/24/art-world-voice-africa-children

June-November, 2013

In a unique collaboration between the Berengo Studio (Venice), Venice Projects (Venice), London College of Fashion and the Wallace Collection (London), Glasstress: White Light/White Heat presents the newly commissioned work of some of today's most important contemporary artists, most of whom will be working in glass for the first time. The exhibition builds on the success of two previous Venice Art Biennale Glasstress shows (2009, 2011), with some fifty artists invited to respond to the theme of light and heat, the components of fire, the fundamental elements involved in the formation of the universe and also the essence of glassblowing. Light is integral to our perception of glass, while heat is required to shape it. The show includes some major and emerging contemporary artists including: Alice Anderson, Polly Apfelbaum, Ron Arad, Miroslaw Balka, Rina Banerjee, Fiona Banner, Loris Cecchini, Hussein Chalayan, Mat Collishaw, Tony Cragg, Tracey Emin, Paul Fryer, Stuart Haygarth, Shirazeh Houshiary, Shih Chieh Huang, John Isaacs, Michael Joo, Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, Hew Locke, Alastair Mackie, Kris Martin, Whitney McVeigh, Tim Noble & Sue Webster, Cornelia Parker, Cai Guo Qiang, Thomas Schutte, Conrad Shawcross, Meekyoung Shin, Joana Vasconcelos, Mariko Mori, Joseph Kosuth, Jason Martin, Jaume Plensa, Koen Vanmechelen. Other artists involved reflect the influence of London College of Fashion such as Lucy Orta, Charlotte Hodes, Boudicca and Helen Storey. Adriano Berengo, President of Berengo Studio, is celebrating 20 years of working with artists this year.

http://www.glasstress.org/event_2013/12

 

19th-24th June, 2014

The show will present the work of artists who have been exploring various processes and attempting to get new results, whether they have developed their own technique or have kept in line with classical tradition of printing or drawing and who have as a result created interesting textural works. Through a salon-style installation of 2-D black and white works, the viewer will be introduced to a panel of artworks presenting a selection of various techniques such as lithography, drawing, etching, collotype, biro-drawing, digitally processed photography, screen-printing, monoprint, etc . The artists will have to share their technicality with the viewer through a “fiche technique” (fact sheet) which would describe their choice of materials, 'craftsmanship' and the different production stages. The exhibition will take place in Balzac's printing room, 17-19 rue Visconti, Paris.

http://www.ruevisconti-editions.com/pages/exposition_a_venir.html

21st May, 2013

On the occasion of the 55th Venice Biennale, 2013, the Gervasuti Foundation is presenting a solo project by London-based American artist Whitney McVeigh entitled Hunting Song. This constitutes a site-specific installation in one of the Foundation’s adjacent buildings, a former hospice for unmarried women dating back to the 16th century. McVeigh has created a fictional old curiosity shop with a diverse collection of objects from her own ‘collection’ interwoven with ‘found’ objects located on site at the Gervasuti Foundation. These have been carefully selected and painstakingly arranged and ordered. Her own objects have been accumulated on her extensive travels over the last 20 years and have a profound personal significance to her. They include an old typewriter, artefacts from Syria and Africa, old letters, diaries, ledgers, encyclopaedias, neglected photographs and tintypes from New York and numerous other books, such as a Children’s Treasure House, which all evoke deep memories for her. Some of McVeigh’s own monotypes are also integrated with the other found objects and discreetly mounted in old frames including one that incorporates the cover of a book of vintage sheet music entitled Hunting Song which also provides the exhibition’s title.

McVeigh’s installation reveals her acute observation and attention to detail in her choice and careful arrangement of objects that aptly relate to the Biennale theme, The Encyclopedic Palace. As we increasingly struggle to deal with a constant flood of information, there are continuous attempts to reconstruct memories and realities as well as to hold on to concepts and tangible objects that are considered as fundamentals. Hunting Song explores both personal history and collective memory and alludes to the layering of time and how the histories of found objects (and implicitly those of their previous owners), can transfer a sense of universality to the person encountering them. As part of the human condition we tend to collect objects in order to enhance our sense of identity and thus to feel more connected to the world.

The Gervasuti Foundation is delighted to present an artist whose work reveals a very personal archaeology and a deep affinity with the Foundation’s mission: the preservation and re- evaluation of context and cultural collective memory through contemporary practice.

http://www.whitneymcveigh.com/uploads/whitney_mcveigh_press_.pdf/original.pdf

 
 

2012

NOW&FUTURE: JAPAN commemorates one year since the 3.11 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami through the three simultaneous contemporary art projects YOKO ONO: MEND PIECE, 2000 CHILDREN and BE/LONGINGS, with a coinciding catalogue publication. Artists include Marina Abramavic, Andy Goldsworthy, Chiharu Shiota, Kiki Smith, Cornelia Parker, Isaac Julien, Whitney McVeigh, Richard Wilson.
 

The aim of the project is to raise urgent social awareness and financial support for the children who lost their parent(s) or guardians in the disaster. In order to achieve this goal, educational workshops for children and academic seminars for adults will be run. These events are in addition to the evening of charitable auction and the audience-participatory work by Yoko Ono exhibited throughout the period. http://www.nowandfuturejapan.org.uk/artist.html

October, November 2009

The exhibition was curated by Sotiris Kyriacou, publication essay by JJ Charlesworth

Back to top